Month: December 2016

One of the great spiritual practices of the ancients that is being revived in these days among Christians is the notion of the examination of conscience and consciousness. Normally, this is a daily undertaking, whereby we consider the day that has passed, and ask the Lord to help us see both where we have sinned (that we may confess and be forgiven) and where we have seen God at work (that we may rejoice).

This can also be an annual practice, however. As we sit at the end of 2016, let me encourage you to spend some time before God today or tomorrow, asking him to help you review your year, particularly to highlight areas where you have seen his hand at work in your life. Take some time to sit with that and praise the Lord for his faithfulness.

There’s no formula for it; we can see God’s beauty in a flower growing by the roadside in summer, or in a snowdrift in winter; we can see God’s hand at work in a ministry we undertake or in the lives of our children as they grow in Christ. God’s fingerprints are all over so much! The challenge for us is to take time to notice them, and to praise the Lord for his activity in our lives.

At the same time, take time to ask God’s blessing on the year to come. If it helps, use these words from hymn writer Frances Ridley Havergal:

Another year is dawning, dear Father, let it be

In working or in waiting, another year with Thee.

Another year of progress, another year of praise,

Another year of proving Thy presence all the days.

Another year of mercies, of faithfulness and grace,

Another year of gladness in the shining of Thy face;

Another year of leaning upon Thy loving breast;

Another year of trusting, of quiet, happy rest.

Another year of service, of witness for Thy love,

Another year of training for holier work above.

Another year is dawning, dear Father, let it be

On earth, or else in Heaven, another year for Thee.

May the Lord bless you with more grace as you look for where he has been active in 2016, and as you pray for him to be active in 2017!

Encouragement From the Word is taking a week off and will be back on January 13.

On this Christmas Day, we celebrate the joy that Jesus brings to us. Isaac Watts’ familiar carol, “Joy to the world”, was never intended as a Christmas carol, but as a paraphrase of Psalm 98. Either way, it extols the Lord Jesus, as we learned in today’s message, based on Titus 2.11-14.

When I talk to folks around this time of year, I discover one fairly common trait: stress.

Whether it’s preparing for guests at home, or preparing to go and be guests in someone’s home; whether it’s fearing poor driving conditions or flight delays; whether it’s trying to get all the work done or trying to make peace with the fact that it won’t be all done, people are stressed.

It’s a sad irony, really.

Jesus’ followers read Isaiah 9.6 as Messianic prophecy, and it says that he would be “the Prince of Peace” – yet even his followers struggle to find peace at this time of year.

What can be done?

I think the answer is to be intentional about honouring the Prince of Peace with our own sense of peace. That can, sometimes, mean making difficult decisions. At other times, it simply involves choosing to have peace.

A very basic way to make that happen is – and this may sound overly simplistic – to breathe. Pay attention to your breathing. Take deep breaths. Decide that a challenging situation will not stress you out.

The latest update to the operating system for the Apple Watch includes a reminder to stop and breathe. Some call it ‘mindfulness’, but you and I can call it prayerfulness. Breathe in the grace of God; he’s got this, whatever it is. Breathe out your stress.

So, amid the kitchen prep and the house cleaning, breathe and pray. If you’re sitting in traffic or waiting on a late flight, breathe and pray. While trying to get all your work done before the weekend, breathe and pray. God’s got it.

The spat between Wesley and Whitfield over the lyrics to this much-beloved carol is a thing of legend (albeit true), but the theology in both the Whitefield-revised version and the Wesley-penned version is top shelf, and deserves our attention. This message is based on Revelation 21.1-7 and Romans 6.1-11, and can be listened to here:

In the area where I live, a fair bit of snow fell yesterday. The amount varied from place to place, but it was what Environment Canada would deem to be a significant snowfall.

And the roads were treacherous.

Mid-afternoon, a good friend called from his car. He was trying to get home, but was sitting in dead-stopped traffic just a few kilometres from our house. The snow was still falling vigorously. Could he seek refuge at our place for a bit? Of course!

Now, our house never looks like a museum. It’s definitely lived in. Sometimes it’s in worse condition than others; yesterday’s condition wasn’t bad, but I suppose that being ready for spur-of-the-moment company is not always Our Thing. But a friend in need is a friend indeed, as the saying goes, so we didn’t hesitate to welcome him.

But while he crawled his way to our place, there was a bit of frantic tidying up done, including preparing the spare bedroom – just in case.

As it turns out, the weather and roads were sufficiently poor that the “just in case” spare bedroom was needed, and we were glad to offer it to him…along with a new toothbrush recently acquired from a trip to the dentist. (After all, he had not planned on sleeping anywhere but his home!)

He crept out of the house at first light, and, I trust, made it home safely this morning.

For me, the moral of the story is that you don’t have to have everything “together” for unexpected company to feel welcome.

In the same way that you don’t have to have everything “together” to welcome guests in your home, you don’t have to have everything “together” to welcome Jesus into your heart.

So many people talk about how they’ll engage in a relationship with God, or go to church, or join a small group, when they have everything “together”. Yet, how often that time never comes! The great news is that you don’t have to have it all together to welcome Jesus into your life. In fact, he wants to be in relationship with you before your Stuff is “together”. It’s in living life with Jesus that our lives can be “together”.

“You, too, must keep watch! For you don’t know when the master of the household will return – in the evening, at midnight, before dawn, or at daybreak. Don’t let him find you sleeping when he arrives without warning. I say to you what I say to everyone: Watch for him!” (Mark 13.35-37, NLT).

The English love their carols expounding on the weather, even though it’s not likely that the Holy Land was under a snow squall watch at the time of the Nativity. Based on Luke 2.8-20 and Philippians 2.5-11, you can listen to the meaning of “The first nowell” by clicking below.

Once again, video technology failed us, so there is no link to Facebook Live. We’ll try again next week.